mattm10
Member
I was wondering if anyone has tested the difference between brewing a lager (cold fermentation) and lagering a brew (storing at cold temperatures after fermentation is complete). Both are supposed to help create a crisp, clean tasting beer, but I would think cold fermentation would be better, since it would prevent the formation of many esters and compounds that are commonly produced at warmer temperatures during fermentation.
I've never tried cold fermentation; however, with my most recent brew (a Cream Ale, brewed with US-05 American Ale yeast), I've been aging it in a fridge at about 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Over the course of about two weeks, I've noticed the yeast character diminishing and the hop flavor shining through more and more. (I did a non-traditional Cream Ale that had bittering hops at 60 minutes plus a small amount of hops at 10 minutes for added flavor). Immediately after bottle conditioning was complete, it was very yeasty, almost like a Hefeweizen with only minor notes of the hops, but now there's very little yeast character left and I can really taste a lot of the floral, herbal notes from the Mt Hood hops. I've loved it both ways, and I think it's really cool that your brew can continue to change so much even after fermentation is complete.
I'm curious what your experiences have been. Do you prefer cold fermentation or cold-aging your brews? I would assume for a really good lager, you probably do both.
(The picture was taken a few minutes after pouring, which is why there's no visible head of foam on it.)
I've never tried cold fermentation; however, with my most recent brew (a Cream Ale, brewed with US-05 American Ale yeast), I've been aging it in a fridge at about 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Over the course of about two weeks, I've noticed the yeast character diminishing and the hop flavor shining through more and more. (I did a non-traditional Cream Ale that had bittering hops at 60 minutes plus a small amount of hops at 10 minutes for added flavor). Immediately after bottle conditioning was complete, it was very yeasty, almost like a Hefeweizen with only minor notes of the hops, but now there's very little yeast character left and I can really taste a lot of the floral, herbal notes from the Mt Hood hops. I've loved it both ways, and I think it's really cool that your brew can continue to change so much even after fermentation is complete.
I'm curious what your experiences have been. Do you prefer cold fermentation or cold-aging your brews? I would assume for a really good lager, you probably do both.
(The picture was taken a few minutes after pouring, which is why there's no visible head of foam on it.)